How about the patient is the doctor and the doctor is the patient. We want to see that doctor getting examined, not the big black guy. We aren't gay homos.
A thrill is simply a palpable murmur. If you can only hear it but not feel it, it is simply a murmur, but if you can also feel it with your hand, it is called a thrill.
Thrills are caused by anything that can cause a murmur, and the causes of murmurs are varied, and found in any textbook of physical diagnosis, internal medicine, or cardiology--they include valvular disease, or a number of congenital or acquired deformities.
In a pinch, just google it. Wikipedia isn't a bad idea either.
this guy is huge.................tough patient!
MrTahadar 10 months ago
Thank you so much for putting this up! The quicktime version they have up on the medinfo site does NOT work at all.
merrrm 1 year ago
very well done
heartandlungs1 1 year ago
How about the patient is the doctor and the doctor is the patient. We want to see that doctor getting examined, not the big black guy. We aren't gay homos.
commandershadebetter 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
if i examined the patient the way she did i'd get an immediate F
i didn't like it
ciao
bawain 3 years ago
Oh what do you know about it. Obviously you are not a med student.
michaelatm2603 3 years ago 2
oh..i dont like it though...
is that what she is doing at 1:32 and for like 5 seconds?
lolipop1264 3 years ago
why do they put their fingers like under the boob and hold it there....?
lolipop1264 3 years ago
It's called palpating the apical pulse. It localizes the point of maximal impulse to determines whether it has moved from the normal position.
DrTropix 3 years ago
What is a thrill and what is it caused by?
ethanhines 2 years ago
A thrill is simply a palpable murmur. If you can only hear it but not feel it, it is simply a murmur, but if you can also feel it with your hand, it is called a thrill.
Thrills are caused by anything that can cause a murmur, and the causes of murmurs are varied, and found in any textbook of physical diagnosis, internal medicine, or cardiology--they include valvular disease, or a number of congenital or acquired deformities.
In a pinch, just google it. Wikipedia isn't a bad idea either.
DrTropix 2 years ago
the female doctor is so hot
ihatesafesmartdriver 4 years ago